Sometimes while out climbing I come across plants growing out of
seemingly bare rock.
Cheesy metaphors may come to mind no matter whether I want
them to or not, about tenacity or how fragile all life is or something.
If it's a plant I like
(e.g. sagebrush, Artemisia tridentata) and if I have water on hand I try
to pour some into the crack the plant is growing out of.
I came across this plant today.
I would've poured it some water
except that gravity was not favorably directed.
The area shown in the pic above
is the lightened diamond near the center of
this pic
which gives context.
In the 1930s, some Jehovah's Witnesses felt it was contrary to
their principles to salute or pledge allegiance to the US flag.
Their children were expelled from school for insubordination.
One parent, Walter Gobitas, sued the school district.
At first he won, but the case was appealed several times and
reached
the Supreme Court, which ruled that school districts could
compel students to salute the flag. From the decision:

The preciousness of the family relation, the authority and independence
which give dignity to parenthood, indeed the enjoyment of all freedom,
presuppose the kind of ordered society which is summarized by our flag.
A society which is dedicated to the preservation of these ultimate
values of civilization may, in self-protection, utilize the educational
process for inculcating those almost unconscious feelings which bind men
together in a comprehending loyalty, whatever may be their lesser
differences and difficulties.

The decision was followed by increased violence toward Jehovah's Witnesses.
A mob of 2500 people burned one of their halls in Maine.
The ACLU reported that Witnesses were physically attacked in over
300 communities.
A Southern sheriff, asked why Witnesses were being run out of his town,
said, "They're traitors; the Supreme Court says so. Ain't you heard?"

The Supreme Court took up the question again only three years later and
ruled
the other way. They said that anyone was free not to salute
the flag, not just those who chose not to out of religious conviction.
From the decision:

National unity as an end which officials may foster by persuasion and
example is not in question. The problem is whether under our Constitution
compulsion as here employed is a permissible means for its achievement.

... To believe that patriotism will not flourish if patriotic ceremonies are
voluntary and spontaneous instead of a compulsory routine is to make an
unflattering estimate of the appeal of our institutions to free minds. ...

What a difference three years made.

Looking back at the public school education I got in the 1960s and '70s,
the inculcation of patriotism was pervasive. Not only did we say the
Pledge of Allegiance every day, but my first music teacher
had us sing patriotic songs, everything from
My Country,
'Tis of Thee (which they never told us was the
melody of God Save the Queen with different lyrics) to the
Marines' Hymn.

We sang the Marines' Hymn when we were about seven years old.
They didn't tell us that the first line in the lyrics
("From the halls of Montezuma") is crowing about
a war
the US waged to take a big swath of territory from Mexico,
or that the next line (to the shores of Tripoli) refers to
a war
fought for a better cause (putting pirates from the
Barbary States out of business).
The darker and lighter sides of our military history:
material for an interesting discussion,
if perhaps not one that seven-year-olds were ready for.